We are selling our bricks&sticks, putting our stuff in storage, and going full-time in about two weeks with the plan of eventually settling someplace. Maybe Georgetown Texas. We have a full schedule starting with the Maritimes Motorcade and ending with the Grandvention/Indiana events. Thus we won't have time to do anything serious, house hunting wise, till November.
I already have an Escapees Livingston address and have been changing our mailing addresses for the last month. My plan is to start our trip to the Maritimes by going first to Nacogdoches/Livingston and establishing our domicile (per Patricia Hatfield's excellent posting and the Escapees literature).
Thus two of the biggees are new drivers licenses and registering our vehicles in Texas and thus the safety inspections.
What are the issues with the inspections? Obviously all lights must be operational. Any gotchas?
I have cracks in both my coach windshields. However, they are not in my field of view, but I am assuming that they will have to be replaced.
Thanks,
Lights, horn, wipers. No check engine lights allowed. Tires (depth). Brakes (stopping). A number of counties (Williamson, where Georgetown is located, is one) require emissions testing on gasoline-powered vehicles so for your car(s) you need to follow whatever your county requirements are. Diesels like the MH are exempt from emissions testing so you can have that inspection done at any registered inspection station. The windshield cracks will depend on where they are.
If you are not aware, Texas now requires inspection/registration in the same month. Shouldn't be an issue for someone doing a first registration in the state. If you are out of state for the renewal date you can self-certify to delay the inspection but then you have 3 days from re-entering the state to get your inspection done.
You should get a class B non-CDL drivers license if domiciling in Texas and your coach weighs over 26000 lbs. This requires written testing for the signs/markers/etc. portion of the CDL exam followed by a driving test in the vehicle itself. You can't do them both on the same day - you have to pass the written before scheduling the driving. Nac and Livingston DPS are very familiar with the test for an motorhome. We did ours in Nac in 2004.
Oh, and the county tax assessor is where you go for vehicle registrations. Department of Public Safety (DPS) is drivers' licenses. Completely different organizations (unlike states which have Departments of Motor Vehicles to cover both).
First, CONGRATULATIONS on going Full-Time! You are taking the step to which many aspire!
My TX safety inspection last year was very simple, basic and quick. The tech walked around the outside, checked all the lights, wipers, glanced at the tires, and had me beep the horn. Then he climbed aboard, and had me drive around the (large) parking lot. I showed him the coach "went (in forward and reverse), turned, and stopped". Then back to the office, took my money, issued decal.
My windshield glass is intact, so I can't say if your cracked glass will be a problem.
Texas just revised the inspection program. See the link below for details. You MUST get the safety inspection first, and then get your new tags. They no longer issue a Safety Inspection decal, just a paper receipt, so you will only have 1 decal on your glass.
Inspection and Registration -- Together At Last! | Two Steps. One Sticker.... (http://twostepsonesticker.com)
Harvey,
Keep us updated with the process if you would. If our house sells, we will be doing similar to you, and probably in a rapid fashion.
Larry
I've had several RV's inspected in Livingston (our home base), pretty basic. No driving, just function checks on wipers and lights. Generally if you can see thru the windshield it good enough.
Haven't done the class B drivers license yet.
Last coach inspection was: I went and asked if that inspection station could do my coach. They said yes and I wrote a check for the $12.50 or whatever it was then. They handed me a sticker and told me where to put it on the window. That was it. Have no ide why they still have the inspection. Florida dropped theirs. My lights, wipers, and all the other stuff could honestly fail a block following the inspection and be bad until next year. Kinda foolish. 8)
Our coach has been inspected twice at Herman Powers Tire Shop in Nacogdoches. It doesn't get driven, the horn doesn't get blown and it only takes a few minutes. This year, I got to scrape off the old sticker...since a new one was no longer needed. Doesn't take long and only cost a few bucks.
I used Boatman Tire in Nacogdoches for my last inspection. Trust me, there was "nothing " to it. I was told that is where FOT takes there coaches.
Had both of my coaches inspected in Seabrook Texas this afternoon at Kwick Car Lube. Cost $7 and there was absolutely nothing to it. Took about 10 minutes to do the paperwork. Now you get an inspection report (no sticker) that you must take when you renew registration.
In Texas: Until things change.. again.
You will need a copy of a current inspection receipt (no decal needed after the current window sticker expires) to get the annual "tag registration decal" along with current proof of Insurance.
As for the month of the inspection and "tag renewal" being within the same month, I don't think it matters (although it's great to get it all taken care of at same time.) pc
I just renewed my license plate (registration) renewal and my inspection expires next month. I have never had my coach driven during an inspection. My coach was one month apart. No questions about inspection when renewing. I plan to renew the inspection next month so I will still be a month apart but with no inspection sticker. Not sure what will happen next year when the registration is due. Will I have to renew the inspection a month early?? The State has indicated no one will be penalized if they are not the same month. We will see. Not a big deal but changes are coming.
Actually, the whole idea of the new program is that both are now forced to expire in the same month.
When you renew (under the new One Sticker system), if you are in the state you must have had a state inspection within the last 30 days. It will either be in the tax assessor's computer system OR have a paper receipt to show them. If you are out of state on your renewal expiration date, you may "self certify" this, but then you have 3 days from when you first return to the state to get your inspection done (and be sure to carry that receipt with you)
Previously, you could renew within 60 days of the registration expiration. You may now renew up to 90 days ahead, but you will still need an inspection. Also, for those who had an inspection done prior to the March 2015 changeover and if that inspection sticker expires AFTER your 2015 renewal date, you don't need to have an inspection until your next renewal.